Category: 2012 election

  • Weinstein and cast defend bin Laden movie

    I’ve seen reports that say the Harvey Weinstein project due to be broadcast on PBS two days before the election about the bin Laden raid has been edited to make Mitt Romney look bad, but I haven’t seen it, so I don’t know, but the Stars & Stripes says Weinstein and crew are denying it;

    National Geographic Channels CEO David Lyle says the film was indeed recut – but to show less footage of the president than an earlier version of the film.

    “I think the end titles run longer than Obama’s time on screen,” Lyle said.

    The movie has been accused by conservatives of having a political agenda in part because of its Nov. 4 premiere date and its backing by Obama supporter Harvey Weinstein. On Wednesday, The New York Times reported that a copy of the film provided to the paper showed that it had been recut to strengthen Obama’s role.

    Fox News reports this about the movie;

    But rather than focusing on the heroes who carried out the mission, President Obama now takes center stage in the film, with voice-overs, still photographs and archival footage being added after “SEAL Team Six” was purchased in May for a reported $2.5 million by Harvey Weinstein, a big supporter of the President.

    Not only that, Meghan O’Hara – a producer for Obama supporter Michael Moore’s films “Fahrenheit 9/11,” “Sicko” and “Bowling for Columbine” – was the one hired to gather that extra footage.

    A report in the New York Times said the new footage serves to “strengthen Mr. Obama’s role and provide a window into decision-making in the White House,” a move the report says will “bolster claims that the 90-minute film amounts to a political stunt.”

    Indeed FrontPageMag.com called it an “Obama Infomercial From Michael Moore’s Favorite Producer” which they say is essentially “about the man that sat on his ass while they (SEAL Team Six) risked their lives.”

    Those reports are at odds, so I guess which ever side you’re on, the movie is not going support your view. I tend to believe the New York Times report, in this case, but I guess we’ll see.

  • Powell endorses Obama – like we we’re surprised

    I don’t know why he felt that he needed to say it out loud, but Colin Powell announced that once again, he supports President Obama, according to the Associated Press in a link sent to us by Tman;

    He tells “CBS This Morning” he respects Mitt Romney but thinks he’s been vague on many issues.

    And Obama hasn’t been vague on any issues? Like promises to Russia that he’ll have more flexibility after this election? Like telling the anti-gun crowd to be patient until after this election? What’s this administration’s energy policy? What is this administration’s plan for the economy? Oh, yeah they’ll straighten out the economy with the money they’re going to save by getting out of Afghanistan.

    Speaking of Obama, Powell said the president got the United States out of Iraq and has laid out a plan for leaving Afghanistan “and didn’t get us into any new wars.”

    All Obama did in Iraq was follow the negotiated withdrawal from the previous administration, and then he blew negotiations with Iraq to keep US forces there and al Qaeda is surging in Iraq. The plan for withdrawal from Afghanistan is not a strategy – no comment on the failures of this administration’s inability to protect the troops from “insider” attacks. “New wars”? We now have troops in Jordan and Africa. We just lost an ambassador in Libya.

    Yeah, he lost me in 1999 when Powell said he was a “compassionate conservative” insinuating that the rest of us conservatives aren’t compassionate, when conservatism is compassion – getting government out of our way so we can each reach our potential. For the record, I didn’t like it much when Bush called himself a “compassionate conservative” either. But he promised to cut my taxes and he did.

    How any self-identified conservative can support this administration is beyond me. There are other reasons for Powell’s endorsement, but since I don’t know what’s in his heart, I won’t speculate, but he’ll have to be more specific than the reasons he’s given in this interview to convince me.

  • The chair that got bin Laden

    So I took this picture of a conversation that was going on between the empty chair that got bin Laden and his Secret Service Agent yesterday;

  • Voters in NC can’t help but vote for Obama

    ROS sends us a link to a Greensboro, NC local station which reports that voting machines wouldn’t let them vote for Romney;

    On Monday, several voters complained that their electronic ballot machine cast the wrong vote. All the complaints were made by people who voted at the Bur-Mil Park polling location.

    One of the voters, Sher Coromalis, says she cast her ballot for Governor Mitt Romney, but every time she entered her vote it defaulted to President Obama.

    “I was so upset that this could happen,” said Coromalis.

    Guilford County Board of Elections Director George Gilbert says the problem arises every election. It can be resolved after the machine is re-calibrated by poll workers.

    “It’s not a conspiracy it’s just a machine that needs to be corrected,” Gilbert said.

    Not so funny now, is it?

  • Obama’s apology tour

    The other night during the debate, Romney accused Obama of going on a world apology tour and the President objected to the characterization. He said he never once said the words that could be construed as an apology. Of course, the Obama-supporting media has jumped in the fray, agreeing with the president that he never said the words out looud, so it wasn’t an apology tour, per se.

    Well, Fox News has assembled some quotes from The Heritage Foundation’s “Barack Obama’s Top 10 Apologies” list;

    – At a Summit of the Americas, Obama regretted how “at times we sought to dictate our terms.” In an op-ed about policy toward the America’s, Obama declared: “Too often, the United States has not pursued and sustained engagement with our neighbors.”

    – Speaking to the Turkish parliament, Obama rationalized: “The United States is still working through some of our own darker periods in our history.”

    – Addressing CIA employees about an administration report which castigated the use of enhanced interrogation techniques against terrorist suspects, the President urged: “Don’t be discouraged that we have to acknowledge potentially we’ve made some mistakes.”

    – In a speech, Obama denounced the techniques used in the war on terror: “Instead of strategically applying our power and our principles, too often we set those principles aside as luxuries that we could no longer afford. And during this season of fear, too many of us – Democrats and Republicans, politicians, journalists, and citizens – fell silent.”

    – In that same address at the National Archives, he went into full apology mode over Guantanamo: “There is also no question that Guantanamo set back the moral authority that is America’s strongest currency in the world. Instead of building a durable framework for the struggle against Al Qaeda that drew upon our deeply held values and traditions, our government was defending positions that undermined the rule of law.”

    You should read the whole thing at the Heritage Foundation’s link, though.

    So, although those lips on his face never form the words for an apology, he still sounds like he’s mighty sorry that he has to represent this country. Luckily, there’s a cure for that.

  • More Stupidity from Chrissy-Poo

    Chrissy-Poo strikes again!  This time, he’s playing the race card:

    “I think they hate Obama. They want him out of the White House more than they want to destroy Al Qaeda. Their No. 1 enemy in the world right now, on the right, is their hatred, hatred for Obama. And we can go into that about the white working class in the South and looking at these numbers we’re getting the last couple days about racial hatred in many cases … this isn’t about being a better president, they want to get rid of this president,’ he (Matthews)  said.”

    Yep.  According to Matthews, people who don’t support Obama are against him because they’re racists.

    But Matthews doesn’t stop there.  According to Chrissy-Poo, people who don’t support Obama hate him so badly that they’d rather see Obama lose the election than see al Qaeda destroyed.

    That opposition can’t possibly be because they think the current POTUS is incompetent, inept, and unable to lead.  Or the fact that they disagree with his policies, finding those polices misguided, counterproductive, and destructive.

    No, anyone who doesn’t support Obama must be a racist.  There’s no other reason not to support Obama.  No less an authority than Chris “Tingly-Leg” Matthews says so!

    Teh stoopid is strong in Chris.  But we already knew that.  This is just more proof.

  • Obama/Romney final debate 2012 live blog

    It should be unlimited now. Everyone should be able to get in. If anyone wants to help with comments, let me know and you’ll get an invitation to be a “producer”. Accept that and your comments will be unmoderated and you’ll be able to help approve comments.

  • Romney and veterans; from the campaign

    I’ve been in contact with John Noonan all weekend. Noonan is the Romney campaign’s Defense Policy Adviser. I’ve been trying to get answers to your questions from the Romney campaign in regards to veterans’ issues and John has been very helpful. This is the result of our conversations;

    Will a Romney Administration reverse the odious hikes to Tricare out-of-pocket costs for military retirees? Good question. President Obama asked for $11 billion in TRICARE fee increases, fees that would ostensibly be passed on to military retirees. The House of Representatives thought the hike was a bad idea, and largely neutralized it by tying any increase in Tricare to cost of living adjustments. That bill was passed in May but we’re still waiting for Senator Reid to take it up in the Senate. So the battlespace will remain shaky until we know what are the exact fee increases. Congress is out until after the election, so my guess is that this happens in the lame-duck session.

    But there’s a larger point here. The philosophy that guides Governor Romney on troops and veterans is two-fold. First, he’s a promise-keeper. His record in Massachusetts is sound evidence to that point. Second, he believes that a promise was made to our military veterans and families when they volunteered for service, and that promise must be kept. If we’re going to keep faith with the military and veterans community, you have to do more than go through the motions. You have to improve on care where care has faltered, you have to restore faith where faith was lost, and you have incentivize a new generation of volunteers who are willing to take an oath on behalf of our shared security. There’s consequences if you don’t meet those obligations, both morally and strategically.

    Will the Tricare surplus remain for Tricare and not used to fund air craft carriers? It was wrong to propose huge TRICARE fee hikes when you have a surplus in that account. But keep in mind that the surplus was approximately $800 million, when the TRICARE bump requested by President Obama was $11 billion dollars. If only that money was used towards something like Navy ships! At least more ships in the fleet would reduce the time our sailors spend away from their families. I note that the USS Eisenhower, an aircraft carrier, is on a 9 month deployment rather than the more typical 6 month rotation. My dad pulled WESTPAC tours on the USS Enterprise during the Cold War, and I know that’s a hell of a long separation time. We’re also cutting 100,000 troops out of service to comply with President Obama’s defense cuts. Another 100,000 will probably go if sequestration is triggered. To that point, a deployment in Afghanistan is typically twice as long as a Navy tour. So yes, we have some money that could be used to ease the strain on deployed forces, whether it’s in decreasing dwell time or adjusting TRICARE. But instead, the money is going to pay for huge increases in the size of federal government. Governor Romney is a firm believer in the U.S. military. In addition to stopping defense cuts, he plans to increase shipbuilding from 9 to 15 ships a year, add 100,000 troops to the force, and increase spending to the base defense budget as war costs come down. When I was in the Air Force, I experienced the dreaded reduction-in-force boards, and know there’s an awful lot of uncertainty in the military ranks that go beyond health care costs. It’s my hope that the Governor’s election, and reemphasis on our national defense, will throw a wrench into fears about RIF boards, retirement, and separation times.

    The president promised the American Legion convention last year that he wouldn’t “balance the budget on the backs of veterans.” While he was making that promise, his SecDef was doing just that. Can Romney make the same promise without reneging on it? President Obama has nearly doubled spending at the Department of Veterans Affairs in four years. But he’s focused on inputs rather than outputs. His emphasis is on how much taxpayer money you can pump into bureaucracies. Governor Romney’s emphasis is the opposite. What are the taxpayers getting out of government agencies – particularly the VA? For example, the VA’s struggled to provide timely care in the past four years. The backlog for disability claims has become a terrible problem. It is reaching one million overdue claims. Same with the waitlist for veterans to see a mental health care provider. The Governor has made reforming the VA a priority. He’s talked about common sense solutions, like directing sources to health care providers and claims adjudicators, rather than nameless administrators and bureaucrats. He will hold VA officials accountable for poor performance and mismanagement, which regrettably is becoming the standard rather than the exception. He doesn’t believe in giving out senior executive bonuses for poor performance when you’ve got a sergeant with post-traumatic stress waiting 60 days to see a therapist. The Governor has advocated simple, common sense technical reforms to the VA like creating a single electronic medical record from boot camp to retirement, so we’re not burning precious time mailing heavy paper medical files across the country. And with incidents of post-traumatic stress and traumatic brain injury on the rise, plus an average 18 veterans a day committing suicide, a waitlist of 2 months to see a mental health provider is unacceptable. The Governor’s solution is to provide veterans access to the TRICARE network of mental health care professionals at the VA’s expense. This doubles the number of mental health care providers available to the VA overnight. It’s outrageous that bureaucratic inertia is standing in the way of fixing this problem, when we already have the resources at our disposal to make meaningful progress on fighting TBI, PST, and veteran suicide. Finally, President Obama’s defense cuts are projected to force up to 200,000 troops out of service. Those unfortunate enough to be separated will become new VA customers. If you think the VA is struggling to meet demand now, just wait will we start forcing that many bodies onto an already overburdened system. It won’t be pleasant to watch.

    Will a Romney administration stop shutting down Tricare Prime? Basically, will the Romney Administration keep the promises that the government made to veterans? We fulfilled our end of the bargain and all we want is what we earned. I haven’t heard of any proposal to shutdown Tricare Prime from either campaign, ours or the President’s. But this does speak to the larger importance of keeping faith and honoring promises. There’s both a strong moral and strategic case to be made here. Start breaking promises, and it’s going to be much harder to attract quality people to staff an all-volunteer military.

    John Noonan
    Defense Policy Advisor
    Romney for President, Inc

    My thanks to John for taking the time to answer the questions we haven’t otherwise heard from the campaign. I especially appreciate that he took the time to do this while the campaign is focused on the debate tonight.